Kconfig 11 KB

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  1. #
  2. # ACPI Configuration
  3. #
  4. menuconfig ACPI
  5. bool "ACPI Support (Advanced Configuration and Power Interface) Support"
  6. depends on !X86_NUMAQ
  7. depends on !X86_VISWS
  8. depends on !IA64_HP_SIM
  9. depends on IA64 || X86
  10. depends on PCI
  11. depends on PM
  12. select PNP
  13. default y
  14. ---help---
  15. Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) support for
  16. Linux requires an ACPI compliant platform (hardware/firmware),
  17. and assumes the presence of OS-directed configuration and power
  18. management (OSPM) software. This option will enlarge your
  19. kernel by about 70K.
  20. Linux ACPI provides a robust functional replacement for several
  21. legacy configuration and power management interfaces, including
  22. the Plug-and-Play BIOS specification (PnP BIOS), the
  23. MultiProcessor Specification (MPS), and the Advanced Power
  24. Management (APM) specification. If both ACPI and APM support
  25. are configured, whichever is loaded first shall be used.
  26. The ACPI SourceForge project contains the latest source code,
  27. documentation, tools, mailing list subscription, and other
  28. information. This project is available at:
  29. <http://sourceforge.net/projects/acpi>
  30. Linux support for ACPI is based on Intel Corporation's ACPI
  31. Component Architecture (ACPI CA). For more information see:
  32. <http://developer.intel.com/technology/iapc/acpi>
  33. ACPI is an open industry specification co-developed by Compaq,
  34. Intel, Microsoft, Phoenix, and Toshiba. The specification is
  35. available at:
  36. <http://www.acpi.info>
  37. if ACPI
  38. config ACPI_SLEEP
  39. bool
  40. depends on PM_SLEEP
  41. default y
  42. config ACPI_PROCFS
  43. bool "Deprecated /proc/acpi files"
  44. depends on PROC_FS
  45. ---help---
  46. For backwards compatibility, this option allows
  47. depricated /proc/acpi/ files to exist, even when
  48. they have been replaced by functions in /sys.
  49. The deprecated files (and their replacements) include:
  50. /proc/acpi/sleep (/sys/power/state)
  51. /proc/acpi/info (/sys/modules/acpi/parameters/acpica_version)
  52. /proc/acpi/dsdt (/sys/firmware/acpi/tables/DSDT)
  53. /proc/acpi/fadt (/sys/firmware/acpi/tables/FACP)
  54. /proc/acpi/debug_layer (/sys/module/acpi/parameters/debug_layer)
  55. /proc/acpi/debug_level (/sys/module/acpi/parameters/debug_level)
  56. This option has no effect on /proc/acpi/ files
  57. and functions which do not yet exist in /sys.
  58. Say N to delete /proc/acpi/ files that have moved to /sys/
  59. config ACPI_AC
  60. tristate "AC Adapter"
  61. depends on X86
  62. default y
  63. help
  64. This driver adds support for the AC Adapter object, which indicates
  65. whether a system is on AC, or not. If you have a system that can
  66. switch between A/C and battery, say Y.
  67. config ACPI_BATTERY
  68. tristate "Battery"
  69. depends on X86
  70. default y
  71. help
  72. This driver adds support for battery information through
  73. /proc/acpi/battery. If you have a mobile system with a battery,
  74. say Y.
  75. config ACPI_BUTTON
  76. tristate "Button"
  77. depends on INPUT
  78. default y
  79. help
  80. This driver handles events on the power, sleep and lid buttons.
  81. A daemon reads /proc/acpi/event and perform user-defined actions
  82. such as shutting down the system. This is necessary for
  83. software controlled poweroff.
  84. config ACPI_VIDEO
  85. tristate "Video"
  86. depends on X86 && BACKLIGHT_CLASS_DEVICE && VIDEO_OUTPUT_CONTROL
  87. help
  88. This driver implement the ACPI Extensions For Display Adapters
  89. for integrated graphics devices on motherboard, as specified in
  90. ACPI 2.0 Specification, Appendix B, allowing to perform some basic
  91. control like defining the video POST device, retrieving EDID information
  92. or to setup a video output, etc.
  93. Note that this is an ref. implementation only. It may or may not work
  94. for your integrated video device.
  95. config ACPI_FAN
  96. tristate "Fan"
  97. default y
  98. help
  99. This driver adds support for ACPI fan devices, allowing user-mode
  100. applications to perform basic fan control (on, off, status).
  101. config ACPI_DOCK
  102. tristate "Dock"
  103. depends on EXPERIMENTAL
  104. help
  105. This driver adds support for ACPI controlled docking stations
  106. config ACPI_BAY
  107. tristate "Removable Drive Bay (EXPERIMENTAL)"
  108. depends on EXPERIMENTAL
  109. depends on ACPI_DOCK
  110. help
  111. This driver adds support for ACPI controlled removable drive
  112. bays such as the IBM ultrabay or the Dell Module Bay.
  113. config ACPI_PROCESSOR
  114. tristate "Processor"
  115. default y
  116. help
  117. This driver installs ACPI as the idle handler for Linux, and uses
  118. ACPI C2 and C3 processor states to save power, on systems that
  119. support it. It is required by several flavors of cpufreq
  120. Performance-state drivers.
  121. config ACPI_HOTPLUG_CPU
  122. bool
  123. depends on ACPI_PROCESSOR && HOTPLUG_CPU
  124. select ACPI_CONTAINER
  125. default y
  126. config ACPI_THERMAL
  127. tristate "Thermal Zone"
  128. depends on ACPI_PROCESSOR
  129. default y
  130. help
  131. This driver adds support for ACPI thermal zones. Most mobile and
  132. some desktop systems support ACPI thermal zones. It is HIGHLY
  133. recommended that this option be enabled, as your processor(s)
  134. may be damaged without it.
  135. config ACPI_NUMA
  136. bool "NUMA support"
  137. depends on NUMA
  138. depends on (X86 || IA64)
  139. default y if IA64_GENERIC || IA64_SGI_SN2
  140. config ACPI_ASUS
  141. tristate "ASUS/Medion Laptop Extras"
  142. depends on X86
  143. select BACKLIGHT_CLASS_DEVICE
  144. ---help---
  145. This driver provides support for extra features of ACPI-compatible
  146. ASUS laptops. As some of Medion laptops are made by ASUS, it may also
  147. support some Medion laptops (such as 9675 for example). It makes all
  148. the extra buttons generate standard ACPI events that go through
  149. /proc/acpi/events, and (on some models) adds support for changing the
  150. display brightness and output, switching the LCD backlight on and off,
  151. and most importantly, allows you to blink those fancy LEDs intended
  152. for reporting mail and wireless status.
  153. Note: display switching code is currently considered EXPERIMENTAL,
  154. toying with these values may even lock your machine.
  155. All settings are changed via /proc/acpi/asus directory entries. Owner
  156. and group for these entries can be set with asus_uid and asus_gid
  157. parameters.
  158. More information and a userspace daemon for handling the extra buttons
  159. at <http://sourceforge.net/projects/acpi4asus/>.
  160. If you have an ACPI-compatible ASUS laptop, say Y or M here. This
  161. driver is still under development, so if your laptop is unsupported or
  162. something works not quite as expected, please use the mailing list
  163. available on the above page (acpi4asus-user@lists.sourceforge.net).
  164. NOTE: This driver is deprecated and will probably be removed soon,
  165. use asus-laptop instead.
  166. config ACPI_TOSHIBA
  167. tristate "Toshiba Laptop Extras"
  168. depends on X86
  169. select BACKLIGHT_CLASS_DEVICE
  170. ---help---
  171. This driver adds support for access to certain system settings
  172. on "legacy free" Toshiba laptops. These laptops can be recognized by
  173. their lack of a BIOS setup menu and APM support.
  174. On these machines, all system configuration is handled through the
  175. ACPI. This driver is required for access to controls not covered
  176. by the general ACPI drivers, such as LCD brightness, video output,
  177. etc.
  178. This driver differs from the non-ACPI Toshiba laptop driver (located
  179. under "Processor type and features") in several aspects.
  180. Configuration is accessed by reading and writing text files in the
  181. /proc tree instead of by program interface to /dev. Furthermore, no
  182. power management functions are exposed, as those are handled by the
  183. general ACPI drivers.
  184. More information about this driver is available at
  185. <http://memebeam.org/toys/ToshibaAcpiDriver>.
  186. If you have a legacy free Toshiba laptop (such as the Libretto L1
  187. series), say Y.
  188. config ACPI_CUSTOM_DSDT
  189. bool "Include Custom DSDT"
  190. depends on !STANDALONE
  191. default n
  192. help
  193. This option is to load a custom ACPI DSDT
  194. If you don't know what that is, say N.
  195. config ACPI_CUSTOM_DSDT_FILE
  196. string "Custom DSDT Table file to include"
  197. depends on ACPI_CUSTOM_DSDT
  198. default ""
  199. help
  200. Enter the full path name to the file which includes the AmlCode
  201. declaration.
  202. config ACPI_BLACKLIST_YEAR
  203. int "Disable ACPI for systems before Jan 1st this year" if X86_32
  204. default 0
  205. help
  206. enter a 4-digit year, eg. 2001 to disable ACPI by default
  207. on platforms with DMI BIOS date before January 1st that year.
  208. "acpi=force" can be used to override this mechanism.
  209. Enter 0 to disable this mechanism and allow ACPI to
  210. run by default no matter what the year. (default)
  211. config ACPI_DEBUG
  212. bool "Debug Statements"
  213. default n
  214. help
  215. The ACPI driver can optionally report errors with a great deal
  216. of verbosity. Saying Y enables these statements. This will increase
  217. your kernel size by around 50K.
  218. config ACPI_DEBUG_FUNC_TRACE
  219. bool "Additionally enable ACPI function tracing"
  220. default n
  221. depends on ACPI_DEBUG
  222. help
  223. ACPI Debug Statements slow down ACPI processing. Function trace
  224. is about half of the penalty and is rarely useful.
  225. config ACPI_EC
  226. bool
  227. default y
  228. help
  229. This driver is required on some systems for the proper operation of
  230. the battery and thermal drivers. If you are compiling for a
  231. mobile system, say Y.
  232. config ACPI_POWER
  233. bool
  234. default y
  235. config ACPI_SYSTEM
  236. bool
  237. default y
  238. help
  239. This driver will enable your system to shut down using ACPI, and
  240. dump your ACPI DSDT table using /proc/acpi/dsdt.
  241. config X86_PM_TIMER
  242. bool "Power Management Timer Support" if EMBEDDED
  243. depends on X86
  244. default y
  245. help
  246. The Power Management Timer is available on all ACPI-capable,
  247. in most cases even if ACPI is unusable or blacklisted.
  248. This timing source is not affected by power management features
  249. like aggressive processor idling, throttling, frequency and/or
  250. voltage scaling, unlike the commonly used Time Stamp Counter
  251. (TSC) timing source.
  252. You should nearly always say Y here because many modern
  253. systems require this timer.
  254. config ACPI_CONTAINER
  255. tristate "ACPI0004,PNP0A05 and PNP0A06 Container Driver (EXPERIMENTAL)"
  256. depends on EXPERIMENTAL
  257. default (ACPI_HOTPLUG_MEMORY || ACPI_HOTPLUG_CPU || ACPI_HOTPLUG_IO)
  258. ---help---
  259. This allows _physical_ insertion and removal of CPUs and memory.
  260. This can be useful, for example, on NUMA machines that support
  261. ACPI based physical hotplug of nodes, or non-NUMA machines that
  262. support physical cpu/memory hot-plug.
  263. If one selects "m", this driver can be loaded with
  264. "modprobe acpi_container".
  265. config ACPI_HOTPLUG_MEMORY
  266. tristate "Memory Hotplug"
  267. depends on MEMORY_HOTPLUG
  268. default n
  269. help
  270. This driver adds supports for ACPI Memory Hotplug. This driver
  271. provides support for fielding notifications on ACPI memory
  272. devices (PNP0C80) which represent memory ranges that may be
  273. onlined or offlined during runtime.
  274. Enabling this driver assumes that your platform hardware
  275. and firmware have support for hot-plugging physical memory. If
  276. your system does not support physically adding or ripping out
  277. memory DIMMs at some platform defined granularity (individually
  278. or as a bank) at runtime, then you need not enable this driver.
  279. If one selects "m," this driver can be loaded using the following
  280. command:
  281. $>modprobe acpi_memhotplug
  282. config ACPI_SBS
  283. tristate "Smart Battery System (EXPERIMENTAL)"
  284. depends on X86
  285. depends on EXPERIMENTAL
  286. help
  287. This driver adds support for the Smart Battery System.
  288. A "Smart Battery" is quite old and quite rare compared
  289. to today's ACPI "Control Method" battery.
  290. endif # ACPI